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Markus Balmer, Marco Semadeni, Daniel Spreng
2002 - 2004
PhD-project, supported by the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology ETH Zurich
Hydropower is a renewable source of energy. Outside the tropics
at least, the environmental impact of its use is small compared
to the impact of exploitation of fossil fuel reserves. Without the
internalization of external costs, electricity from hydropower is
at an unfair disadvantage to electricity from fossil fuel-burning
power stations. In the coming harsh climate of liberalized electricity
markets, this unfair disadvantage may jeopardize progress towards
reducing CO2-emissions as required by the Kyoto agreement. In addition,
liberalized electricity markets may further privatization and endanger
investments in technologies like hydropower utilization that have
long lifetimes.
Although many estimates of external costs related to energy technologies
have been made over the last 40 years (EC, 1997; Schleisner, 2000),
not much is known about the external cost of hydropower. This lack
of knowledge will impede political steps towards the internalization
of external costs of energy production and use generally. Little
is known on the topic of external cost of hydropower mostly due
to the fact that hydropower's environmental impacts are extremely
site-specific. Some hydropower schemes have relatively large external
benefits while others have relatively large external costs. This
diversity has been viewed as a problem, but at the same time, it
presents an interesting scientific challenge and a good reason for
undertaking this project. The typology to be developed in this project
is seen as an attempt to answer this challenge.
Direct approaches for determining external costs derive values for
externalities by assessing the valuation of stakeholders, whereas
bottom-up approaches address external effects from a natural science-based
perspective that tries to quantify effects, determine their significance
and only then value, i.e. monetize their impacts. The data employed
will come from both approaches. The typology to be developed will
not only include 1) the different plant types but also 2) various
environmental characteristics, 3) the variety of other land and
water resource use, and 4) various arrays of stakeholder perspectives
and perceptions. The main source of information will be the content
of environmental impact assessment reports, particularly in Switzerland
(available from BUWAL) but also from abroad (available for instance
from the Commission on Large Dams, Paris). Other sources will be
existing case studies on the external cost of hydropower and the
literature on monetization of external effects relevant to hydropower
utilization.
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